Breadcrumbs

The coastline of the European Islands is an inimitable beautiful landscape, which is based on the variety of its terrain, the transparency of the waters and the peculiarities of the small coastal bays, which are unique and hidden. The fascinating coastline of the Mediterranean islands is a good alternative to the large expanses of sand of some of the best known and most visited beaches in the world.

“Sometimes all seas seem one, particularly when the journey is long; sometimes each sea is a different sea. I have sailed the islands seeking out similarities and differences, comparing Sicily with Corsica, Majorca with Minorca. Getting to know the length and breadth of the Mediterranean is no easy task. We are never certain how far it extends, that is, how much of the coast it occupies and where it ends, on either land or sea. Ancient sages taught that the Mediterranean extends as far as the olive growths.

The Mediterranean is not merely geography. Its boundaries are drawn in neither space nor time. The Mediterranean shores have seen not only the silk route but also the crisscrossing of many others: routes of salt and spices, amber and ornaments, oils and perfumes, tools and arms, skills and knowledge, arts and sciences. Hellenic emporia were markets and embassies; Roman roads spread power and civilization; Asian soil provided prophets and religions. Europe was conceived in the Mediterranean” (Matvejevic, P.: Mediterranean: a cultural landscape).

InnoNauTICs is a transnational cooperation project between the Mediterranean islands mainly aimed at developing an electronic platform that will enable the promotion of nautical tourism and will favour cooperation between the entrepreneurial sector and the potential users. Its transnational character and heterogeneity lay, among others, in the fact that nine partners from 4 countries participate in InnoNauTICs, gathering together the main public and private agents operating on insular territories (Chambers of Commerce, Regional Governments and Mediterranean Associations at insular level). more